34 THE CUBA REVIEW 



Central Santo Tomas (Cia. Azuc. Sto. Tomas) 91,602 



Central Ramona 118,681 



Central Fajardo 71,061 



Central Nombre de Dios 85,227 



Central Union 138,268 



Central Espana 463,589 



Central Altamira 60,201 



Central Fidencia 85,530 



Central Pastora , 51,699 



Total 3,125,107 



American-Owned Interests Located in Cuba Dependent Entirely or in Great Part 



Upon Its Sugar Industry 

 Cuba Railroad (this company runs through the section where most of the mills are 

 located and is entirely dependent upon the sugar mills both in the hauling of cane 

 to the mills, the taking of the finished sugar to the ports, and the hauling of 



merchandise and supplies to and from the mills) $65,800,000 



Cuba Co 26,150,000 



American Steel Car Co. of Cuba 5,000,000 



Munson Steamship Co 500,000 



New York & Cuba Mail Steamship Co 3,500,000 



Cuba Distilling Co. (engaged in the carrying of molasses from sugar mills, including 



box cars, tank cars, etc., etc.) 30,000,000 



Independent warehouses 300,000 



Baldwin Locomotive Co - 3,000,000 



American Locomotive Co 2,000,000 



International General Electric Co 20,000,000 



Total 156,250,000 



Amounts Due Americans for Machinery, Merchandise, and Supplies Secured 



in Part by Liens, Etc. 



Fulton Iron Works $2,500,000 



Reading Iron Works 350,000 



Fox Bros. & Co _ 750,000 



Various manufacturers, etc., holding commercial paper of sugar mills and other secur- 



ties and held by American banks 125,000.000 



Total $128,600,000 



The amount of Cuban cane sugar annually consumed in the United States is 

 furnished entirely by American capital. 



When we come to the amount of money involved, the figures are even more 

 startling. Over $1,000,000,000 appears to be invested in Cuban sugar mills and its 

 allied business dependent upon sugar. The combined investment of the beet-sugar 

 industry of the United States, its cane sugar and its insular possessions, aggregates 

 $545,000,000. 



A brief summary of these investments is as follows: 



Cuba 



Sugar mills and estates owned by Americans $621,219,766 



Sugar estates controlled by Americans by reason of their being financed by 



Americans 125,000,000 



Investments in Cuba owned by Americans dependent entirely upon the sugar 



business 156,250,000 



Amounts due Americans for machinery, merchandise, and supplies and 



secured in part by equipment trusts, etc 128,600,000 



Total 1,031,069,766 



Beet-sugar industry in the United States 172,610,022 



Cane-sugar industry in the United States 32,828,407 



Cane-sugar industry in Porto Rico 59,708,527 



Cane-sugar industry in the Hawaiian Islands 208,911,520 



Cane-sugar industry in the Philippine Islands 71,200,000 



Total 545,258,476 



